[ad_1]
Some stuff we don’t think twice about buying every day is a huge waste of money like premium gas, greeting cards, books, and cable TV. Bigger things like new cars, unnecessary insurance, and timeshares are also a waste. Eliminating wasteful spending frees up money to put toward your financial goals.

If you’re looking for ways to come up with more money to put toward your goals, start by examining your spending habits.
By tracking your spending and seeing where every dollar goes, you’ll likely find several instances of spending money you don’t have to. It could be little things that add up or recurring monthly expenses that are an utter waste of money. Once you eliminate your bad spending habits, that money can go toward your emergency fund, paying off debt, or other important things.
Here are the 41 biggest wastes of money to look out for:
1. Eating Out
It’s easier than ever not to cook at home. Between fast food, takeout, delivery, and dining out, you have many options that don’t involve spending time in the kitchen. What you save in time and convenience, you lose in cash.
The markup on food is massive compared to what it costs to make the same dish at home. It’s also less healthy since you can’t control portions or ingredients.
Plan your meals for the week, then spend one day prepping and cooking. You’ll be less tempted to waste money on restaurant meals when you know you have food waiting for you at home.
2. Alcohol
You might like a glass of wine with dinner, but it’s a huge waste of money if you order one in a bar or restaurant. You might be able to get a decent bottle at your local liquor store for the price of a single glass in a restaurant or pub. Cocktails can cost even more since you’re typically paying for a single shot.
Save money and order a soft drink instead. Soft drinks aren’t a bargain either, but they often come with free refills. You can be social, enjoy a meal, then drink until you get your fill at home for far less money.
3. Convenience Foods
Prepared foods are convenient, but convenience comes with a high price tag. Most prepared foods are not worth the extra cost.
Skip the pre-cut fruit, salad mix, shredded cheese, and other convenience foods. Chances are, you can make more of the same thing for less money. You’ll spend less on groceries when you eliminate convenience foods from your grocery shopping list.
4. Meal Kits
Getting an entire ready-to-cook meal sent straight to your door saves time. Someone else chooses the recipe, does all the shopping, boxes up the ingredients, and delivers it to you. It sounds great, but it’s actually a ripoff.
You still have to do the cooking, and some of the prep work yourself, so you’re not saving that much time. The portions are sometimes so small you end up having to make additional sides yourself. Then there’s the wasteful packaging and the ingredients that can arrive not so fresh.
As far as cost goes, some meal kits work out to between $10 and $15 per meal per person. Would you be OK with spending $40 to $60 on dinner every night for a family of 4?
Plan your own meals. Make them yourself. You’ll save a ton of money over meal kits.
5. Uneaten and Expired Food
In addition to overspending at the grocery store, the average family of 4 spends $1,500 a year on uneaten food. It’s an absolute waste of money, especially when some families struggle to put food on the table. Save money by not buying more than you need, storing your food properly, and repurposing leftovers.
6. Groceries
Everyone needs to eat, but that doesn’t mean that you’re not wasting money at the supermarket. If you study the sales circular and plan your meals for the week around sale items, you can automatically spend less money on groceries. Other ways to stop overspending on food include making a list and sticking to it, not shopping when you’re hungry, buying in-season produce only, and eliminating unplanned trips to the store.
7. Bottled Water
Americans consumed 15.7 billion gallons of bottled water in 2021, according to the International Bottled Water Association. Harvard University pegs the cost of bottled water as about three thousand times more expensive per gallon than tap water. That’s a lot of gallons of water and an absolute waste of a lot of money.
Then there are the additional costs in the form of damage to the environment. The fossil fuels used to produce plastic bottles cause pollution. The bottles that end up in landfills will take hundreds of years to degrade.
Stop buying bottles of water and buy a reusable water bottle instead. You’ll stay hydrated, save money, and help the environment.
If you’re concerned about the quality of your tap water, buy a water filtering pitcher you can keep in your fridge for around $20. A replacement water filter costs a few dollars and filters about 40 gallons of water before it needs replacing, which is the equivalent of 320 16-ounce bottles of water.
8. Credit Card Interest
Carrying a credit card balance is a common financial mistake that many people make. Credit cards make it easy to overspend. With low monthly minimums, it’s tempting to make the minimum payment and use what you have left for something else.
Carrying a balance drives up the cost of your purchases and harms your credit score. Making just the minimum payment racks up the interest and keeps you in debt for far longer. All the money you pay in interest is money wasted.
9. Bank Fees
Most bank fees are avoidable. If you have your paycheck direct deposited, maintain a minimum balance, and only use in-network ATMs, the bank will usually waive fees. You can bank for free as long as you don’t bounce checks or require any fee-based services.
10. Late Charges
Late fees are an absolute waste of your money. Put that money back in your pocket by making a solid effort to be more financially responsible. Add your payment due dates to your calendar and set up reminders if necessary.
11. Clothes You Don’t Need
If you have a closet full of clothes, chances are you have pieces or outfits you haven’t worn in a long time. That doesn’t mean you need to replace your wardrobe. It means you need to stop buying stuff you don’t wear.
Stick to timeless, versatile pieces you know you’ll wear. Don’t buy new clothes for a special occasion or event unless you’re certain you’ll wear them more than once. Don’t buy anything just because it’s on sale.
12. Electricity
You might not realize it, but you probably pay more on your electric bill than you should. Small changes to your habits will prevent you from wasting electricity and money.
Switching to LED bulbs and turning off the lights when you leave a room are easy ways to stop wasting money and cut your electric bill. Unplug any electronics or appliances you’re not using since they still draw power when not in use. You can also use cold water with your washer and air dry your dishes instead of using the drying cycle on your dishwasher.
13. Heating and Cooling
Heating and cooling typically take up a large percentage of your utility bills. There are some things you can do to lower your costs, though. For example:
- Turn down your thermostat when the house is empty, or everyone’s asleep
- Set the temperature 2 or 3 degrees lower in the winter and 2 or 3 degrees higher in the summer
- Seal drafty windows
- Change your filters regularly
- In the winter, keep the blinds open to allow sunlight and warmth in
- In the summer, avoid using the stove or oven during the hottest times of day
Paying to keep your home warm in the winter and cool in the summer isn’t cheap. You don’t have to waste money on it, though.
14. Smoking
Cigarettes are expensive. The average price per pack is $8, with several states charging over $10. They can cost you even more in terms of your health and related medical expenses.
Quitting is not easy, but it is possible. If you can do it, you’ll improve your financial health and possibly your physical health. If cold turkey isn’t for you, speak with your doctor about your options.
15. Lottery Tickets
Buying lottery tickets is one of the bigger wastes of money. Many people buy lottery tickets with the hope of striking it rich. But when you buy a $2 ticket, the most likely outcome is you wasted $2.
You probably won’t break your budget if you buy a ticket or two when the jackpot gets massive. Someone will win eventually. Buying scratch tickets or regularly playing the lotto is not a financially sound decision.
16. Cable TV
Cable is no longer necessary with the rise of online streaming. Between paying for several channels you never watch, equipment rental fees, and hidden charges, you might save a lot of cash every month by getting rid of cable.
If you’re paying for cable and a streaming service or two, examine your viewing habits. Are you hanging on to cable TV for one or two shows? If so, popular cable channels like HBO and Showtime are available as standalone streaming services.
If you think you might miss live television, a live streaming service such as YouTube TV might save you some money over your current cable package. Do the math.
17. Streaming Services
More streaming services are coming online, and prices are going up. Like cable, you might be paying monthly fees for a streaming service you don’t watch often. If you have multiple subscriptions, keep the one or two you watch most and cancel the rest.
18. Books
Books look nice on a shelf. They might provide a more engaging experience than reading words on a screen.
But they can also take up too much shelf space. Lugging books around in a backpack or in boxes when your move is a pain.
Borrow books from the library if you usually buy a book, read it one time, and never touch it again. You’ll save money and space.
Get a Kindle if you can’t bear not having a book to read all the time. Digital books are often cheaper, a Kindle travels well, and physical storage space won’t be an issue.
19. Newspapers
Many people appreciate newsprint and the ritual of reading the morning paper. If you would rather save money and get your news in real-time, you can get most of it online without paying.
Explore other sources if your newspaper of choice uses a paywall for access. You might find a site or columnist you like better.
20. Mobile Phone Insurance
Cell phone insurance costs around $10 a month and covers you against damage, loss, and theft. If you’re careful with your phone and never use it, you’re wasting around $120 a year.
There are also deductibles and limits with your cell phone insurance. You can make up to 2 claims per year, your deductible could be as high as $299, and you’re not guaranteed to get the same make and model as a replacement. So even if you do use your insurance, you might still be losing money.
21. The Latest Gadgets
Standing in line for hours to get the latest phone or tech toy is a huge waste of time and money. The latest version is often similar to the previous version, buggy, or includes changes you might not like.
When something new comes out, the price of the previous version usually drops. If you need to replace your tech gear, shop one version back from the current model. You might be able to save a lot of money not being on the cutting edge.
22. New Cars
Buying a brand new car is wasting money for most people. The value starts decreasing the moment you drive off the lot. That new car will be worth roughly 20% less than you paid after one year and 60% less after five years.
Taking out a loan to buy a new car makes it even worse. Paying interest can add thousands to your total cost.
Then there are ongoing expenses like car insurance, maintenance, registration fees, and fuel costs. Spending so much money every month on an asset that loses its value so quickly is one of the biggest wastes of money. You can find yourself car poor, where you don’t have enough money to enjoy life or put toward your financial goals.
23. Premium Gas
If you’re pumping super unleaded into a car that doesn’t need it, you’re wasting money on gas.
Premium gas is much more expensive than regular gas. Using higher octane gasoline than your owner’s manual recommends offers little to no benefit, according to this Car and Driver test. It won’t give you better gas mileage, it’s not cleaner, and it doesn’t significantly improve engine performance.
Unless your car manufacturer recommends it or you hear a lot of engine knock, regular will do.
24. Rental Car Insurance
If you’ve ever tried to rent a car cheap, you know car rental companies make it difficult. Most try to sell you on extras and things you probably don’t need. Insurance is one of the more expensive upsells.
If you have car insurance, your policy probably covers you when you rent a car. Many credit card companies include insurance when you rent a car using their card. Turning down insurance from the rental company can save you up to $30 a day.
25. Weddings
The average cost of a wedding in 2021 was $28,000, according to a survey conducted by The Knot. There are so many better things to spend that money on than a one-day party. You could use it as a down payment on a house, pay off debt, go back to school, start a business, or save it for a rainy day.
If you want your wedding day to be about you and your partner without bankrupting your savings, there are plenty of cheap places to elope. If you have to have a wedding, find a cheap wedding venue where you can hold both the ceremony and reception, negotiate everything, and consider getting married off-season when vendors typically drop prices.
26. Brand Name Products
Store brands, generic products, and lesser-known brands are often just as effective, taste the same, or contain the same ingredients for a much lower cost. When you spend more for essentially the same item, you’re paying for the name on the label.
Look at the products you buy frequently. Are your shopping bags filled with name-brand products? Are there things you buy frequently you could swap out for their generic counterparts?
There are often store brands or generics for staples, household necessities, and health and beauty products. Drugstore cosmetics sometimes contain the same ingredients as high-end beauty products.
27. Unreturned Products
Sometimes we buy things we regret. The product doesn’t work, won’t fit, or is a disappointment. Not returning items you can’t or won’t use is a silly waste of money.
Some stores do make returning unwanted purchases a hassle, and it’s also inconvenient. But if you’re unsatisfied, not returning a product with a money-back guarantee or to a store with a generous return policy is lazy. It’s also costly and unnecessary.
28. Extended Warranties
Extended warranties are usually not worth the money. They’re overpriced and don’t cover all the problems you could have. If the product works perfectly for the extended warranty period or you forget you bought it, it’s an utter waste of money.
29. Movie Theater Snacks
Movie theaters charge outrageous prices for popcorn, snacks, and drinks at the concession stand. It’s not illegal to bring your own snacks, though theater management frowns on it. You should be fine as long as you are discrete, don’t make a mess, and don’t bring in alcohol or any hot food.
30. Greeting Cards
The money you spend buying and sending greeting cards adds up. You could be out a couple of hundred dollars if you send your friends and family a card for every holiday, life event, and special occasion.
Send a note instead. It’s far more thoughtful. It’s also much cheaper than paying $5 for a store-bought sentiment.
31. Paper Products
Single-use paper products like paper plates, napkins, cups, and paper towels generate a lot of unnecessary waste. Using paper products once, then throwing them in the garbage means you’re also throwing money away.
You don’t have to use your good china, but you can pick up a cheap set of dishes at a dollar store or thrift shop. Reusable dishcloths, napkins, and cheap cups can take the place of their one-use equivalents.
32. Coffee Shop Coffee
You can make a cup of coffee at home that rivals your local coffee shop at a much lower cost. You won’t get rich giving up coffee, but if you give up your daily coffee shop run, you could save well over $1,000 a year.
33. Women’s Products
Products marketed directly to women often cost more. Some women’s items are also smaller or contain less product despite costing more. It’s an insidious practice known as the “pink tax.”
Before you reach for that bag of pink razors or flowery-smelling body wash, compare the cost per unit to the manly or gender-neutral version.
34. Name-Brand Medicines
Name-brand over-the-counter and prescription medicines cost significantly more than their generic counterparts.
According to the FDA, generics go through a rigorous approval process, work the same, and are as safe as the equivalent brand-name products. So you can stop wasting money when a generic version is available.
You can save $2 – $4 a bottle on aspirin and OTC allergy meds by purchasing the drugstore brand. The savings are even more pronounced with prescription medications.
35. Identity Theft Insurance
Most people don’t need identity theft insurance or services. Service providers can’t prevent someone from stealing your personal information or financial data. They can only alert you after the fact.
Some credit card issuers offer free credit monitoring services and alert you to changes in your credit score. Request a free copy of your credit report once a year through annualcreditreport.com. You can also free freeze your credit files by contacting the three major credit bureaus, Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion.
Other free ways to protect yourself from identity fraud include using strong passwords, not sharing your personal information on social media, shredding documents with sensitive information, and watching out for phishing scams.
36. Timeshares
Timeshares are often marketed as a low-priced vacation home that makes an excellent investment. That’s simply not true. Timeshares lose value immediately, are hard to get out of, and the burdensome maintenance fees typically rise every year.
37. CDs and DVDs
Many people still spend money on CDs and DVDs even though they’re becoming obsolete and clutter up your living space. You can borrow music and movies from libraries for free. Subscribing to a streaming service for a month costs about the same as one disc.
38. Jewelry
Jewelry is expensive and serves no useful purpose. It’s an utter waste of money.
It’s also a poor investment. Jewelry stores usually don’t buy or buy back from the public. Stores that do and other avenues like pawn shops offer wholesale or meager prices for your pieces.
Many people purchase jewelry as a gift symbolizing their love. There are many other ways to show someone you love them every day.
39. Express Shipping
Online stores make a lot of money by charging extra for speedier shipping and handling. While standard shipping will take longer, spending extra money on express shipping isn’t worth it. If you need something right away, don’t wait until the last minute and look for it locally.
40. Gift cards
Gift cards are not as good a gift as you might think. Up to $3 billion worth of gift cards goes unused every year. People lose them, forget about them, or don’t shop at the stores where the cards are accepted.
Put a little more thought into your gift-giving.
41. Gym Memberships
A gym membership can be expensive. Gym memberships are a waste of money unless you’re someone who regularly goes all year round. There are plenty of ways to exercise and live a more healthy lifestyle without going to a gym or spending much money.
The Biggest Wastes of Money
It’s hard to change spending habits, especially if they have been built up over time. If you find yourself throwing away money on the things on this list, consider making small incremental changes one at a time. For example, you can easily find ways to throw out less food.
The less you waste your hard-earned dollars, the more you have to put toward financial goals and things that matter.
More From Kinda Frugal
How Can I Spend Less Money on Groceries?
How to Aggressively Pay Off Debt
42 Best Frugal Living Tips To Save Money
Featured Image Credit: Unsplash
[ad_2]